69

Just starting to get into HTML 5 and an testing out geo location...liking it so far. I am hitting a bit of a speed bump though...when I try to get my geo location, chrome automatically blocks the page from getting my location. This does not happen at other sites such as the site below:

http://html5demos.com/geo

The scripts I'm using:

<script type="text/javascript" JavaScript" SRC="geo.js"></script>   
<script type="text/javascript" JavaScript" SRC="Utility.js"></script> 
<script type="text/javascript" JavaScript" SRC="jquery.js"></script> 
<script type="text/javascript" JavaScript" SRC="modernizr.js"></script>  

function get_location() {

        if (geo_position_js.init()) {
            geo_position_js.getCurrentPosition(show_map, handle_error);
        }

    }
    function show_map(position) {
        var latitude = position.coords.latitude;
        var longitude = position.coords.longitude;

        alert("lat:" + latitude + " long:" + longitude);


    }
    function handle_error(err) {
        alert(err.code);
        if (err.code == 1) {
            // user said no!
        }
    }

    if (navigator.geolocation) {
        navigator.geolocation.getCurrentPosition(show_map, handle_error);
    } else {
        error('not supported');
    }

I am testing this out from a local directory on my machine, so there isn't really a "domain" like "http://whatever.com/mytestpage.html". Is this why I am not getting prompted? If so, is it possible to force the browswer to request permission to get the user's geo location and is it possible in my scenario?

2

9 Answers 9

97

There's some sort of security restriction in place in Chrome for using geolocation from a file:/// URI, though unfortunately it doesn't seem to record any errors to indicate that. It will work from a local web server. If you have python installed try opening a command prompt in the directory where your test files are and issuing the command:

python -m SimpleHTTPServer

It should start up a web server on port 8000 (might be something else, but it'll tell you in the console what port it's listening on), then browse to http://localhost:8000/mytestpage.html

If you don't have python there are equivalent modules in Ruby, or Visual Web Developer Express comes with a built in local web server.

8
  • 9
    python -m http.server for python 3.x
    – Feyyaz
    Jan 13, 2013 at 15:59
  • Had the same issue and dropped the file into my local php server (xampp htdocs directory). I'm assuming if you want to use geolocation within a front-end application in development, you can't just run it from your desktop, it has to be server-side. I'm wondering why google decided to add that restriction to Chrome.
    – Emanegux
    Jun 12, 2013 at 17:46
  • php -S localhost:8080 php -S <addr>:<port> Run with built-in web server.
    – iegik
    Jun 16, 2014 at 11:56
  • node app.js Run simple Node.js content server on port 9615 stackoverflow.com/questions/6084360/…
    – iegik
    Jun 16, 2014 at 12:11
  • is there any solution for the file:// URI ?? Jul 7, 2014 at 15:12
31

None of the above helped me.

After a little research I found that as of M50 (April 2016) - Chrome now requires a secure origin (such as HTTPS) for Geolocation.

Deprecated Features on Insecure Origins

The host "localhost" is special b/c its "potentially secure". You may not see errors during development if you are deploying to your development machine.

3
  • 2
    For local dev use http://sitename.localhost Google Chrome allows getCurrentPosition() on .localhost, Thanks!
    – Duncanmoo
    Apr 17, 2018 at 12:59
  • @Duncanmoo I tried using http://sitename.localhost but it DOES NOT work!
    – salouri
    Oct 18, 2021 at 6:13
  • @salouri Note that the above answer and comment were from 2017 and 2018, Chrome has made changes since. Also typing something all caps is like shouting, it is also vague and does not allow anyone to help you further.
    – Duncanmoo
    Oct 18, 2021 at 7:34
7

As already mentioned in the answer by robertc, Chrome blocks certain functionality, like the geo location with local files. An easier alternative to setting up an own web server would be to just start Chrome with the parameter --allow-file-access-from-files. Then you can use the geo location, provided you didn't turn it off in your settings.

0
4

The easiest way is to click on the area left to the address bar and change location settings there. It allows to set location options even for file:///

enter image description here

2

Make sure it's not blocked at your settings

http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/16404/how-to-disable-the-new-geolocation-feature-in-google-chrome/

2
  • This answer is unrelated to the concrete problem as Chrome always blocks file://.
    – wh81752
    Jan 19, 2016 at 11:02
  • Unfortunately the linked article is old and obsolete now. Feb 2, 2017 at 9:05
2

if you're hosting behind a server, and still facing issues: try changing localhost to 127.0.0.1 e.g. http://localhost:8080/ to http://127.0.0.1:8080/

The issue I was facing was that I was serving a site using apache tomcat within an eclipse IDE (eclipse luna).

For my sanity check I was using Remy Sharp's demo: https://github.com/remy/html5demos/blob/eae156ca2e35efbc648c381222fac20d821df494/demos/geo.html

and was getting the error after making minor tweaks to the error function despite hosting the code on the server (was only working on firefox and failing on chrome and safari):

"User denied Geolocation"

I made the following change to get more detailed error message:

function error(msg) {
  var s = document.querySelector('#status');
  msg = msg.message ? msg.message : msg; //add this line
  s.innerHTML = typeof msg == 'string' ? msg : "failed";
  s.className = 'fail';

  // console.log(arguments);
}

failing on internet explorer behind virtualbox IE10 on http://10.0.2.2:8080 :

"The current location cannot be determined"

1
  • Yes thank you for this, after ages of messing around trying to get this working (or using safari - yuk!) simply changing the url to 127.0.0.1 worked for me. Legend! Aug 18, 2016 at 15:33
1

For an easy workaround, just copy the HTML file to some cloud share, such as Dropbox, and use the shared link in your browser. Easy.

0

I too had this problem when i was trying out Gelocation API. I then started IIS express through visual studio and then accessed the page and It worked without any issue in all browsers.

0

Check Google Chrome setting and permit location access

Change your default location settings.
On your computer, open Chrome.
At the top right, click More Settings.
Under "Privacy and security," click Site settings.
Click Location.
Turn Ask before accessing on or off.

After I changed those settings, Geolocation worked for me.

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